
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


Does AI make us dumber, or does it just move the line between what humans need to know and what tools can handle?
In Episode 10 of Not Brothers, Mark and Ryan pick up the thread from their previous conversation about AI in education and push it further: if AI can write the paper, build the CLI app, summarize the research, and automate the busy work, what exactly are humans supposed to learn, practice, and protect?
The conversation gets into education, critical thinking, memorization, work, hobbies, purpose, the future of AI adoption, and the difference between delegating execution and outsourcing your brain.
The short answer: yes, AI can make you dumber at the thing you delegate. But that may be fine if you’re using the saved time and leverage to get smarter about the thing that actually matters.
00:00 — Does AI make us dumber?
01:02 — AI in education vs AI at work
02:27 — Delegating your brain
03:44 — What are schools actually measuring?
06:04 — Real-world skills vs academic restrictions
06:54 — Resourcefulness vs intelligence
09:23 — AI, memorization, and what we call “smart”
10:31 — Does learning need to be hard?
12:26 — Are we at another inflection point?
14:23 — Human purpose when work changes
16:23 — Universal high income and building for fun
18:00 — Retiring without a backup plan
20:25 — What do we do with AI-created time?
21:17 — Are AI models plateauing?
24:08 — The IKEA example: AI plus human judgment
25:43 — Acceptable AI use in education
27:48 — When does AI work become “mine”?
29:42 — Building blocks and the 10-year-old problem
31:07 — Handwriting, typing, and obsolete skills
33:51 — Brain development and hard things
35:52 — Why AI adoption feels faster than the internet
37:53 — Can AI or the internet be regulated?
40:15 — So, does AI make us dumber?
40:30 — Dumber at one thing, smarter at another
42:45 — Critical thinking vs subject matter expertise
44:18 — AI is best at patterned execution
46:27 — The final answer: maybe
48:24 — Are papers even the right test?
50:06 — Education needs to figure this out
By Mark Hughes, Ryan HughesDoes AI make us dumber, or does it just move the line between what humans need to know and what tools can handle?
In Episode 10 of Not Brothers, Mark and Ryan pick up the thread from their previous conversation about AI in education and push it further: if AI can write the paper, build the CLI app, summarize the research, and automate the busy work, what exactly are humans supposed to learn, practice, and protect?
The conversation gets into education, critical thinking, memorization, work, hobbies, purpose, the future of AI adoption, and the difference between delegating execution and outsourcing your brain.
The short answer: yes, AI can make you dumber at the thing you delegate. But that may be fine if you’re using the saved time and leverage to get smarter about the thing that actually matters.
00:00 — Does AI make us dumber?
01:02 — AI in education vs AI at work
02:27 — Delegating your brain
03:44 — What are schools actually measuring?
06:04 — Real-world skills vs academic restrictions
06:54 — Resourcefulness vs intelligence
09:23 — AI, memorization, and what we call “smart”
10:31 — Does learning need to be hard?
12:26 — Are we at another inflection point?
14:23 — Human purpose when work changes
16:23 — Universal high income and building for fun
18:00 — Retiring without a backup plan
20:25 — What do we do with AI-created time?
21:17 — Are AI models plateauing?
24:08 — The IKEA example: AI plus human judgment
25:43 — Acceptable AI use in education
27:48 — When does AI work become “mine”?
29:42 — Building blocks and the 10-year-old problem
31:07 — Handwriting, typing, and obsolete skills
33:51 — Brain development and hard things
35:52 — Why AI adoption feels faster than the internet
37:53 — Can AI or the internet be regulated?
40:15 — So, does AI make us dumber?
40:30 — Dumber at one thing, smarter at another
42:45 — Critical thinking vs subject matter expertise
44:18 — AI is best at patterned execution
46:27 — The final answer: maybe
48:24 — Are papers even the right test?
50:06 — Education needs to figure this out